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Shipwright builds shared Docker images within a git repository in the
right order and publishes them tagged with git’s revision/branch
information so you’ll never loose track of an image’s origin.

It’s the perfect tool for building and publishing your images to places
like Docker Hub or your own private registry. Have a look at our
motivation to see why we built it and the pain
points it solves for you.

Installation

Shipwright is a simple python script you can install with pip

$ pip install shipwright

Quickstart

Once installed, simply change to a project of yours that contains
multiple Dockerfiles and is in git.

Add a json formatted file named .shipwright.json to the root
directory of your project. At minimum it should contain the version
number of your Shipwright config and a namespace which is either
your docker hub user name or the URL to your private repository.

Additionally your config file can map directory names to alternative
docker repositories. For example here is a .shipwright.json for the
docker hub user shipwright that also maps the root of the git
repository to the docker image shipwright/shared and the /foo
directory to shipwright/awesome_sauce.

Now you can build all the docker images in the git repo by simply
changing to any directory under your git repo and running:

$ shipwright

This will recurse through all the directories, looking for ones that
contain a Dockerfile. Shipwright will build these Dockerfiles in order
and by default tag them with <namespace>/<dirname>:<git commit>
along with <namespace>/<dirname>:<git branch> and
<namespace>/<dirname>:latest

Working example

NOTE: you can use any username you’d like while building locally. In
the above example we use ``shipwright``. Nothing is published unless you
use the ``push`` command. For your own projects, substitute
``shipwright`` in the above example with your (or your organizations)
official docker hub username or private repository.

Notice that if you run the shipwright a second time it will return
immediately without doing anything. Shipwright is smart enough to know
nothing has changed.

Shipwright really shines when you switch git branches.

$ git checkout new_feature
$ shipwright

Notice that shipwright only rebuilt the shared library and service1,
ignoring the other projects because they have a common git ancestry.
Running docker images however shows that all the images in the git
repository have been tagged with the latest git revision, branch and
latest.

In fact, as Shipwright builds containers it rewrites the Dockerfiles so
that they require the base images with tags from the current git
revision. This ensures that the entire build is deterministic and
reproducible.

Building

By default, if you run shipwright with no arguments, it will build all
Dockerfiles in your git repo. You can specify one or more specifiers
to select fewer images to build. For example you can build a single
images and its dependencies by simply specifying its name on the command
line.

$ shipwright <namespace>/some_image

Run `shipwright –help’ for more examples of specifiers and their uses.

Publishing

With one command Shipwright can build your images and push them to a
remote repository.

$ shipwright push

If you like you can just push your latest images without building.

$ shipwright push --no-build

The same specifiers for building also work with push. You might use
this to build an entire tree in one step then push a specific image like
so.

$ shipwright build
$ shipwright push -e <namespace>/public_image

0.4.0 (2016-06-13)

Isolate all git functionality, so as to create pluggable Source Control wrappers.